Getting Sports-Averse Kids Moving

Playing a sport isn’t the only way for kids to exercise.

Laura Todd Carns
3 min readApr 15, 2021
Photo by Robert Collins on Unsplash

Some kids take off running with their first steps. They’re climbing things and riding things and bouncing around, making the most of every opportunity to move their bodies. Parents of those kids typically worry about broken bones and scraped knees. And those naturally active kids often go on to sign up for organized sports, which have their own built-in exercise regimens. Practice three times a week plus a game on the weekends, sometimes multiplied by multiple sports. Parents find themselves more worried about rotator cuff injuries and getting enough electrolytes than “is my kid getting enough exercise?”

But not every kid is wired for that level of activity. Some kids would rather curl up with a good book or play a board game with a pal. Some kids hate the competitiveness of most youth sports, and some have trouble with the social aspects of group activities. Some kids don’t live in a place where it’s safe or easy to play outside, and some kids are naturally more risk-averse, shying away from activities where they sense they could get hurt.

Thankfully, signing a kid up for soccer isn’t the only way to make sure they’re engaged in healthy movement. But finding alternatives for the non-sporty kid may take a little more effort and creativity…

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Laura Todd Carns
Laura Todd Carns

Written by Laura Todd Carns

Freelancer & fictioneer. Contributor to Medium pubs Human Parts, GEN, Curious; bylines elsewhere in WaPo, Quartz, EL, The Lily & more. www.lauratoddcarns.com

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